08-27-2023, 07:13 PM
Dobanion,
Thanks for the Triclopyr tip. I have enough gunpowder trees left to kill that I can do some experimenting. And will take on the guavas accordingly.
I saw somewhere that basal bark application of Milestone was very effective with Albizias. I tried it on some gunpowders to no lasting effect beyond scarring.
terracore,
I didn’t know about the Albizias being leguminous and Milestone being specific that way. The toilet paper trees might also be because Milestone kills them bing bang fast and complete. I wonder if it may also have something to do with Albizias having their vascular system very close under the bark, or maybe that is a characteristic of leguminous trees.
Or1on,
In my limited experience, the trouble with girdling (besides it being a lot of work on huge trees) is that the tree above the girdle can die, but the root system remains and can sprout up very vigorous new branches/trunks and you can end up with multiple trunked tree replacing the single trunked tree. The toilet paper trees are great at this. And a friend claims he paid a guy to girdle a huge gunpowder (like 20 inches) and the tree repaired itself and kept growing.
Of course, every invasive species is different and there is likely no one size fits all method.
I will report continuing success/failure. Thanks for all the interesting posts! Rock on PunaWeb…
Cheers,
Kirt
Thanks for the Triclopyr tip. I have enough gunpowder trees left to kill that I can do some experimenting. And will take on the guavas accordingly.
I saw somewhere that basal bark application of Milestone was very effective with Albizias. I tried it on some gunpowders to no lasting effect beyond scarring.
terracore,
I didn’t know about the Albizias being leguminous and Milestone being specific that way. The toilet paper trees might also be because Milestone kills them bing bang fast and complete. I wonder if it may also have something to do with Albizias having their vascular system very close under the bark, or maybe that is a characteristic of leguminous trees.
Or1on,
In my limited experience, the trouble with girdling (besides it being a lot of work on huge trees) is that the tree above the girdle can die, but the root system remains and can sprout up very vigorous new branches/trunks and you can end up with multiple trunked tree replacing the single trunked tree. The toilet paper trees are great at this. And a friend claims he paid a guy to girdle a huge gunpowder (like 20 inches) and the tree repaired itself and kept growing.
Of course, every invasive species is different and there is likely no one size fits all method.
I will report continuing success/failure. Thanks for all the interesting posts! Rock on PunaWeb…
Cheers,
Kirt